Tag Archives: Route 66

There are many stories born on Route 66 that tug at the heart, but perhaps one more than any other when, in June 1961, the lives of four little boys were changed forever.

James Dolphus (‘JD’) and Utha Marie
Welch were a typical American couple in their early thirties. JD, a burly
six-footer and 200lbs, was a truck driver for Trans-Con, while Utha was a
housewife and stay at home mother for their four sons. Jimmy, 12; Billy, 9: Tommy,
8 and 5-year-old Johnny. (There had been another son, born between Jimmy and Billy,
but Noble – named after Utha’s father – was a sickly child from birth and died
in infancy.) This, however, didn’t stop both parents being involved in many
local activities in their hometown of Spencer, Oklahoma.

JD and Utha Marie Welch.

Most of JD’s family lived in California and, in June 1961, the family set out from Oklahoma to drive to Tulare, California to see JD’s mother before she went in for surgery. Then they intended to return to Oklahoma via Colorado Springs. The boys were keen to camp during the trip and JD and Utha agreed they could take their Boy Scouts pup tent. On Thursday 8th June, a day into the trip, the family left Amarillo in the morning. It was late at night by the time they stopped for gas in Ash Fork, Arizona and enquired about a motel room. The owner would tell police that JD had thought the room too expensive and left. As the motel owner never spoke about the incident publicly (despite being the last person outside of the family and their murderer to see the Welches alive), one wonders whether, glancing at the family’s shiny two-year-old Oldsmobile – JD had only bought it two weeks earlier – and calculating the lateness of the hour and the small boys, quoted a price higher than normal.

Looking north-east across the Aubrey valley, close to where the Welch family made camp. [Image courtesy of Google Maps]

No-one will ever know why the family
didn’t then stop in Seligman where there were more motels. It may have been
cost or it may have been that the boys were nagging their parents to camp. But
eventually, around midnight, JD pulled into the side of the road around 13
miles west of Seligman. Even now, it’s a bleak and barren stretch of road, the
plain of the Aubrey Valley stretching for miles around. The only cover were two
large piles of rubble and it was beside one of these that JD pitched his sons’
tent while he and his wife slept in the Oldsmobile.

The next morning, little Johnny was the first boy awake. He went over to the car where his parents were sleeping and tried to wake them. Confused, he ran back to his brothers, saying there was something on mommy’s face. Going to check, Jimmy found his mother’s face covered with blood. He lifted his father’s head and found that he too had been shot several times in the head. The little boys tried desperately to flag down help, but several cars would speed past before salesmen and race drivers, Jere Eagle and Dan Cramer from California, stopped and realised the horror of the situation.

The boys’ pup tent beside the Oldsmobile. Despite being so close, none of the boys heard the shots that killed their parents.

Highway Patrolman Dan Birdino and Deputy
Sheriff Perry Blankenship were first to arrive on the scene, Blankenship having
been notified by his wife, Bertie Lee, after a driver stopped at Johnson’s Café
on the east end of Seligman where she worked as a waitress. Bertie would have a
bigger role in this story than she could have imagined at the time.

Although around $60 had been taken from
JD’s wallet, Utha’s purse, which contained $147, and her expensive jewellery
was untouched. Despite a few promising leads – a Greyhound bus had stopped at
the same place although this turned out to be some hours after the murders –
clues quickly dried up. The best that the local police had was a statement from
Bertie Blankenship about a young man she had served late the previous night. He
only had a nickel on him, not enough for a cup of coffee, but there was
something about him that spooked Bertie so much she gave him the coffee for free.
A few hours later, the same man returned to the all-night diner and this time
ordered a full meal with tomato juice, paying for it with a $20 note and
professing not to recognise Bertie.

However, a suspect did flag up on the law enforcement radar almost immediately. James Abner Bentley lived in Gilbert, Arizona. However, his mother and estranged wife claimed that he had been in Fresno, California, with them on the night of the murders. Arrested for the robbery and attempted murder of a Phoenix gas station attendant in late June, it transpired that Bentley had been in Fresno – but a month earlier, when he had killed the owner of a liquor store.

Shown a photo of Bentley by Sheriff Jim Cramer, Bertie Blankenship identifies him as the man who visited the diner twice. [Photo by Bill Nixon, Arizona Republic]

So, James Abner Bentley was already suspected of the Welches’ murders just days after they happened and local Seligman police had a mug shot of Bentley. For whatever reason, no-one thought to show that photo to Bertie Blankenship. Bertie didn’t see a photo of Bentley until a year later after a cellmate of the condemned prisoner had revealed that Bentley alluded to the murders, proudly saying he’d left the children alive. When Bertie was shown an image of Bentley, she immediately identified him as the stranger who had come to the diner – once poor and once with money in his pocket – the night of the murders.

James Abner Bentley. he would be described as a ‘mad dog’ by a boy who witnessed his attempted murder of a Phoenix gas station worker.

James Abner Bentley was charged with the murders of JD and Utha Welch while on death row in San Quentin, convicted of the murder of the Fresno liquor store owner. Had his death sentence been commuted – and that was a definite possibility at the time as Pat Brown, then Governor of California, was a firm opponent of the death penalty – then Arizona would have proceeded with the prosecution for both the Welch murders and the robbery and attempted murder charge in Phoenix. But, on 23rd January 1963, just after 10am, Bentley went to the gas chamber. It was little consolation to the four small boys (although Jim was, unsurprisingly, a lifelong supporter of the death penalty) whose childhood ended so brutally on the side of Route 66.